Belmont Resources Ltd. announced that drill core logging has been completed on two additional drill holes AJ23-06 and AJ23-09 with visual analysis showing that a second mineralized zone of over 100 meters of extensive silicic and phyllic alteration accompanied by widespread sulphide mineralization was intersected. Drill holes AJ23-06 and AJ23-09 targeted a strong coincident geophysical anomaly beneath surface gold mineralization at the `A' Zone located 100 meters south east of drill holes AJ23-07 and AJ23-08 where both holes intercepted a 100 meter mineralized zone directly beneath the Athelstan gold mine. Silica, silica-carbonate and phyllic alteration intersected over 100 metre durations in all four diamond drill holes in the South Zone directly beneath and nearby the Athelstan mine.

These mineralized zones appear to be correlative between drill holes and could represent a 100 metre step out, along the strike of the Athelstan gold zone trend. The discovery of multi-metre quartz shear and stockwork style vein intersections with all lithologies hosting widespread pyrrhotite and pyrite and lesser chalco and arsenopyrite may potentially be one or more conduits and fracture spaces for deep seated mineralizing hydrothermal fluids and related to the auriferous deposits found in the historic gold mining above. Shallow listwanite units (oxidized to unweathered) were consistently intersected along with very wide intense alteration zones with moderate sulphide mineralization at depths previously untested with historic exploration drilling or mining.

The recently completed 9 hole, 2,000m drill program tested several coincident geophysical-geological anomalies on the A-J property. Drill holes AJ23-01 to 05 were drilled in the North Zone with drill holes AJ23-06 to 09 drilled in the South Zone. South Zone: Potential near-surface resource with high-grade feeder system: South Zone drilling tested for a potential feeder contact/structure for the near-surface gold mineralization within a 1.0 km mineralized gold trend which includes the Athelstan and Jackpot past producing gold mines which produced 7,600 ozs Au & 9,000 oz Ag (Minfile 082ESE047) Along with the two former gold mines this trend includes numerous trenches, pits and adit as well as mine waste dumps.

Sampling in this area has returned extensive high gold and silver results. In particular sampling of the mine dumps have returned grades as high as 1 oz/ton gold and over 5 oz/ton silver. Gold mineralization in this zone is coincident with 2020 IP survey signatures of subsurface chargeability and resistivity highs, in addition to overlapping magnetic lows.

All interpreted to potentially relate to the presence of sulphide mineralization, as well as silica, silica-carbonate and phyllic alteration zones. Core logging of all four drill holes from the South Zone has now been completed with drill samples being sent to MSA Labs in Langley B.C. Logging of North Zone drill holes AJ23-01 to 05 continues and is expected to be completed in the next week. Listwanite and Serpentinite: Listwanite (carbonated serpentinite) is a term to describe the silica-carbonate alteration of serpentinite and is commonly associated with high-grade lode-gold mineralization.

All of the historic production from the property, and the vast majority of the previous exploration, all of which were in the South Zone, has been directed at massive sulfide and oxidized sulfide zones within listwanite. During the serpentinization process any gold present in the serpentine may be assimilated with secondary sulfides and/or magnetite and could be indicative by the magnetic anomalies within the property. These opaque minerals (magnetite) are subsequently destroyed in talc-carbonate alteration zones (magnetic low features), which results in gold being released from the serpentinite wall rocks and transported in solution.

The gold and silica-rich fluids are transported to higher crustal levels via faults where the change in conditions (lower temperature, pH and O2) results in the precipitation of gold, quartz and sulfides. The Mother Lode gold district in California and the Abitibi greenstone belt of the Superior Province of Canada are two of the most well-known examples of listwanite-associated lode-gold in North America. In general, the richest gold grades within these deposits are associated with, or in close proximity to carbonate-altered ultramafic rocks (Listwanite).

Listwanite is also directly associated with several multi- million ounce gold deposits in British Columbia, Atlin, Bralorne and Barkerville.